Brooch
On View In:
Gallery 350
Artist:   Harry Bertoia  
Title:   Brooch  
Date:   c. 1950  
Medium:   Sterling silver, ebony wood, thread  
Dimensions:   2 1/4 x 1 11/16 x 11/16 in. (5.72 x 4.29 x 1.75 cm)  
Credit Line:   The David and Ruth Waterbury Endowment for Contemporary Craft  
Location:   Gallery 350  

The three brooches shown here exhibit Bertoia's skill as a designer/craftsman. He skillfully manipulated and forged silver and thread to create wearable pieces that explored qualities of transparency, biomorphism, and zoomorphism. The aesthetic that he helped develop proved extremely influential in the jewelry field throughout the 1960s. Jewelry was part of Bertoia's creative output for a relatively short period of time, mainly during and after World War II when restrictions on metal forced him to work on a small scale. By 1949, architect Ralph Rapson, who had known Bertoia during their time as students at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan, contacted Bertoia for jewelry to sell through his and his wife Mary’s new modern design shop in Boston, Rapson, Inc. At least eight pieces, including these three, were retained by the couple when they sold the business in 1954.

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   Bertoia, Harry  
Role:   Designer  
Nationality:   American  
Life Dates:   American, 1915-1978  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:    
Classification:   Adornment  
Physical Description:   X-shaped silver frame with dark purple and red threads wrapped around frame to form two rectangles; central rectangle of dark ebony wood with silver bar at middle  
Creation Place:   North America, United States, , ,  
Accession #:   2010.28.1  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts